The Roswell Files: Signal, Myth, and Military Secrecy
A disciplined separation of witness testimony, official explanations, Project Mogul records, and UFO folklore.
Under Review DailyExecutive Summary
Roswell is best treated as a secrecy-driven myth engine: a real 1947 debris recovery, Cold War nuclear-detection programs, confusing public statements, and later witness narratives combined into a durable extraterrestrial story. The strongest records support classified balloon/intelligence work and real record gaps; they do not support recovered alien bodies or craft.
Evidence Ledger (research packet)
| Claim | Source | Source Type | Evidence Grade | Confidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Roswell began with a real 1947 debris-recovery event and official press confusion. | Government Records: Results of a Search for Records Concerning the 1947 Crash Near Roswell, New Mexico | official report | A- | high |
| The best-documented explanation is classified Project Mogul or related balloon instrumentation, not a recovered spacecraft. | The Roswell Report | official/declassified report | A- | medium-high |
| Military secrecy and records gaps materially helped transform Roswell into an enduring myth. | Government Records: Results of a Search for Records Concerning the 1947 Crash Near Roswell, New Mexico | records search and official analysis | B+ | medium-high |
| Alien bodies or extraterrestrial wreckage were recovered. | The Roswell Report: Case Closed | counterclaim review | D | low |
Sources
- Government Records: Results of a Search for Records Concerning the 1947 Crash Near Roswell, New MexicoU.S. Government Accountability Office • official report • accessed 2026-05-21
Strong official records-search source; cannot prove what destroyed or never-created records might have contained.
- The Roswell ReportU.S. Air Force • official report • accessed 2026-05-21
Agency source with institutional incentive to defend prior conduct; still provides primary-program records and the official Project Mogul explanation.
- Report of Air Force Research Regarding the Roswell IncidentDepartment of the Air Force / NSA FOIA reading room • declassified official report • accessed 2026-05-21
Same Air Force research released via an intelligence-agency archive; useful for provenance but not independent corroboration.
- The Roswell Report: Case ClosedDefense Technical Information Center • official report • accessed 2026-05-21
Official counter-claim focused on later body stories; relies on memory-conflation explanation that remains contested by believers.
AI Analysis
The evidence points to a real classified-program seed amplified by institutional secrecy, weak public explanation, and later testimonial accretion. The unresolved portion is records completeness and witness interpretation, not a demonstrated alien recovery.
Patterns
- Classified military projects can create narrative vacuums.
- Official records both clarify and invite suspicion when gaps are acknowledged.
- Later body claims are weaker than contemporaneous debris records.
Uncertainties
- Whether all relevant 1947 local records were preserved or lawfully destroyed.
- Exact alignment between Project Mogul flight material and ranch debris testimony.
- How much later testimony reflects memory conflation versus independent observation.
Counterarguments
- Official Air Force sources have institutional conflicts and should not be treated as neutral final arbiters.
- Records gaps are real, but absence of records does not establish the alien-recovery claim.
- Witness testimony deserves mapping, yet extraordinary physical claims require authenticated physical evidence.
Timeline
- 1947-07Roswell Army Air Field announces and then reframes recovered debris near Roswell, New Mexico.
- 1994Air Force releases research attributing debris to Project Mogul-related balloon equipment.
- 1995-07-28GAO releases records-search report documenting surviving records and gaps.
- 1997Air Force releases Case Closed addressing alien-body narratives.